It the equal amounts of time are T units of time, then the two graphs will be curves such that their width (domains) = T, but their heights (ranges) will be different.
From the information provided in the question, you may not assume that both the graphs start at the same time, not may you assume that they are straight lines.
yes it can because of the calculated average which is equal
The most important thing in creating intervals for a frequency distribution is that the intervals used must be non-overlapping and contain all of the possible observations. They are often equal intervals, but sometimes unequal ones are used. It all depends on the data.
-- The distance/time graph for an object in uniform motion is a straight line,which may be sloped.-- The distance/time graph for an object in non-uniform motion may be a linethat isn't straight. But even if the graph is a straight line, that's not enoughto guarantee that the object's motion is uniform ... the distance/time graphreveals the object's speed, but not the direction of its motion.
non uniform motion
If the speed is constant then equal distances are covered in equal intervals of time If acceleration is constant then equal change in velocity occurs in equal intervals of time.
when a car travels equal distance in equal intervals of time its velocity is uniform and equal
uniform and non uniform motion uniform motion [ equal distance in equal intervals of time is known as uniform motion] non uniform motion [equal distance at unequal intervals of time is known as non uniform motion]
If a motion diagram shows unequal distances between images, it likely means that the object is accelerating. Acceleration causes the object to cover unequal distances in equal time intervals. This could be due to a change in speed or direction of the object's motion.
The prefix for the word 'equal' is-: 'un'- which makes 'UNEQUAL'
The distance covered by a body will be equal to its displacement when the body moves in a straight line without changing direction. This occurs when the body moves from one point to another point in a straight path, as the distance covered will be the same as the displacement between the initial and final positions.
On average, biking 3 miles is equivalent to running 1 mile in terms of distance covered.
unequal